Impact of early-life exposure to <em>Cryptosporidium parvum</em> infection on intestinal homeostasis at adulthood
2019
Lacroix-Lamandé, Sonia | Ménard, Sandrine | Baillou, Ambre | Virlogeux-Payant, Isabelle | Salle, Guillaume | Olier, Maïwenn | Nicolosi, Alessandra | Pézier, Tiffany | Laurent, Fabrice
Numerous studies recently describe the relationship between influences during early-life period and later-life health and disease. Cryptosporidium parvum is a zoonotic parasite responsible for a diarrheal disease that affects mostly children under 5 and immunocompromised patients (AIDS or organ transplant patients). Epidemiological studies have reported that after resolution of C. parvum infection, patients still suffer for abdominal pain. In this context, by using a neonatal mouse model of cryptosporidiosis, we tried to decipher the intestinal consequences at adulthood of the neonatal infection by analyzing the composition of the microbiota, the composition of immune cells in the intestine but also consequences on visceral sensitivity and the susceptibility to an unrelated intestinal infection. We observed that adult mice infected by C. parvum during the neonatal period display a modification of microbiota and of the composition of immune cells. These intestinal modifications were associated with an increased viscero-sensitivity and with a higher sensitivity to Salmonella infection. Altogether these results clearly demonstrate that an infection by C. parvum during the neonatal period induces intestinal imprinting that can be responsible for abdominal pains and increased susceptibility to another intestinal infection, way after the resolution of C. parvum infection.
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